Understanding Lasers

Chapter 9.5.2: Broad-Area and High-Power Lasers

9.5.2 Broad-Area and High-Power Lasers

The power available from narrow-stripe diode lasers is limited by the generation of waste heat and by the damage that extremely high optical power can cause to optical surfaces. Diode lasers decrease in efficiency and age more rapidly as temperatures increase, so waste heat must be removed from lasers operating at high power. However, even active cooling cannot eliminate the danger of optical damage as the power per unit area becomes very high in the small emitting area of a diode laser.

One way to circumvent these limitations is to make the diodelaser stripe much wider-100 or 200 μm across. This produces gain in a larger volume and spreads the emission over a broader width of the edge of the active layer, reducing power density at the surface. Broad-area lasers can reach powers of a few watts.

Their main advantage is delivering high power from a single emitting aperture. The beam quality is not as good as that from a narrow-stripe laser, although the wide emitting aperture means that the beam does not diverge as rapidly. The high power from a single emitting area is an important advantage for diode pumping of solid-state lasers, and particularly of fiber lasers.

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